Grey's Anatomy Season 1 features intentional diversity in casting, with Shonda Rhimes pushing back against network executives to avoid an all-white show through blind-casting, resulting in prominent roles for an Asian lead intern (Cristina Yang), a Black resident (Miranda Bailey), and Black surgeons (Richard Webber, Preston Burke). This was progressive for 2005 network TV, more diverse than Seattle's demographics, but integrated organically into a hospital setting without race or identity driving character arcs or plots. Storytelling centers on traditional medical drama elements: intern competitions, forbidden romances (Meredith/Derek), personal insecurities, medical ethics, and family issues like Alzheimer's. Minor progressive touches include gender objectification via Izzie's modeling past humiliation, a Jewish patient's religious refusal of surgery, and an intersex male patient discovering he has testes (portrayed positively, challenging parental gender imposition). No overt lectures, systemic critiques of racism/sexism/patriarchy, LGBTQ focal points (George faces a casual 'gay' rumor but it's incidental), or identity politics. Creator emphasized strong female characters and colorblind casting for broad appeal, not activism. Massive ratings success with universal praise, no contemporary backlash; modern retrospective complaints label early diversity 'woke' but ignore context of entertainment-first narrative.